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The Vesus The Heart In The Sca

... humans, as mortals, are often incapable of. The law in Puritan towns and colonies was very strict. These laws reigned supreme. They accused mentally ill people of practicing witchcraft instead of using logic to tell otherwise. After being "convicted", the "witches" would not be imprisoned; they would be stripped of the only possession left- their life. An example of this is Mistress Hibbons who allowed the laws to convince her that she was a servant to "the Prince Satan" himself. Another example of these unsympathetic omnipr ...

Number of words: 664 | Number of pages: 3

Spotted Horses Vs. Mule In The

... Yard because “Spotted Horses” fits Perrine’s profile of interpretive literature, and “Mule in the Yard” seems to replicate Perrine’s profile of escape literature. According to Laurence Perrine in his seventh edition of Literature: Structure, Sound and Sense he states the definition of interpretive literature is “Literature written to deepen and broaden and sharpen our awareness of life.” Interpretive literature is not candy coated. It allows its readers to experience the trials and tribulation ...

Number of words: 972 | Number of pages: 4

Hester And Abigail

... father’s name. She says, “…my child must seek a heavenly father and shall never know an earthly one” (Hawthorne 64). She is a very truthful woman except for one time. A good example would be when she has to lie to her daughter, Pearl, about the letter she wears on her chest. She claims she wears it “for the sake of its gold thread” (166). Hester is also an adulator who is punished by the village. Abigail Williams is a teenager who is a great liar. She manages to pull off a big witch-hunt with skills p ...

Number of words: 666 | Number of pages: 3

The Romantics

... meek, and He is mild;/ He became a little child." All these characterize innocence. The end of the poem, which says, "Little Lamb, God bless thee!", shows innocence through the "Little Lamb" and just the mentioning of "God bless." Blake and other transitional writers liked the tranquility, purity, and innocence that they put into their poems. Although all three groups of author's wrote structured poems, Wordsworth was more so than most. He was a first generation writer, and he wrote "I Wandered Lonely As a Cloud." It has four stanzas a ...

Number of words: 597 | Number of pages: 3

Wild Meat And The Bully Burgers

... a very hard time speaking proper English, and the teacher yells at them for not being able too. Lovey has a hard time in math class and gets teased for being Japanese. It's as if the rest of the students expect her to be smart just because she is Japanese. Lovey is supposed to write her own obituary for her English class. It gets her thinking about death, and consequently she thinks about it all the time. Lovey dreams and fantasizes about being haole. She thinks up of the perfect house with all the trimmings. She wants to marry a haole so ...

Number of words: 2038 | Number of pages: 8

The Great Gatsby 16

... in the city. The narrator himself introduces the reader to this idea: “I lived at West Egg, the -- well, the less fashionable of the two, though this is a most superficial tag to express the bizarre and not a little sinister contrast between them” (9). In the city families who have been wealthy for several generations occupy the sophisticated East Side; in order to buy an apartment there one must provide good recommendations. West Side is less sophisticated and therefore less desirable for it is open to the “new money. ...

Number of words: 1740 | Number of pages: 7

Ethan Frome 3

... to enhance the overall theme of Ethan Frome. The imagery of a novel is a key factor in elaborating upon the light-hearted and carefree elements, as opposed to the dark and immoral components of the setting in which the novel takes place. For example, imagery can be used in a likable manner to achieve the desired affect of making the reader enjoy and love the setting so that the theme may be elevated. In Edith Wharton’s Ethan Frome, Wharton first presents Starkfield as a cheery uplifting town saying, ‘The winter morning was ...

Number of words: 803 | Number of pages: 3

Crucible

... one reads on, one is told that Abigail actually lied as she talked to her uncle. So she is not honest by telling him that there was nothing more. And also by telling her friends “Listen, now; if they be questioning us, tell them we danced - I told him as much already”(Pg. 18 | Line 10) She changes her behavior drastically regarding to her behavior at the beginning of Act 1. By saying, “And mark this. Let either of you breath a word, or the edge of a word about the other things, and I will come to you in the black of some terrible night ...

Number of words: 357 | Number of pages: 2

To The Lighthouse

... the central symbol of the actual physical domestic space of the house. The characterization of Mrs. Ramsey, who is identified as being the guardian, or the ‘angel of the house’, cannot be separated from the actual physical space itself. Just as the walls and doors of the house serve to keep out and protect the inhabitants from the outside world, Mrs. Ramsey works to create a domestic space where she can shield the people from the effects of modern life and offer a retreat into a more natural landscape. This natural landscape howe ...

Number of words: 718 | Number of pages: 3

Concentration Camps

... just one of six extermination camps. It was also a labor concentration camp, extracting prisoners' value from them, in the form of hard labor, for weeks or months. Auschwitz was the end of the line for millions of Jews, gypsies, Jehovah's Witnesses, and other innocents. Some spend almost two years in this most infamous of . The average prisoner only survived eight weeks in Auschwitz. Some learned the ins and outs of survival in Auschwitz. Auschwitz was the largest concentration and extermination camp constructed in the Third Reich. Located ...

Number of words: 1365 | Number of pages: 5

The Scarlet Letter (forest)

... of Pearl and represents evil. The forest offers a sanctuary from the harshness of everyday Puritan life. In the forest, many pivotal characters can bring forth hidden emotions and thoughts. The forest trail leads characters away from the Puritan settlement, and out into the dense and dark forest. This seems to be the only escape for the Puritans in the novel. This is the only place where the people can be free from Puritan law and code. It is here, in the forest that Dimmesdale can express his deep love for Hester and where she can do t ...

Number of words: 998 | Number of pages: 4

Trifles By Susan Glaspell

... are there. The Sheriff, the attorney and the men set up the task of investigating the murder. The women, however, are concerned with the appearance of the house, especially the kitchen. The word trifle is used once in the play to indicate how the men think of what the women. are doing in the kitchen while the men are trying to solve the murder. The women were in the kitchen discussing the fact that Minnie was concerned about her fruit preserves. The County Attorney makes the statement: "I guess before we're through she may have something mor ...

Number of words: 781 | Number of pages: 3

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